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Fox Financial Services

At Fox Financial, we help CT and NY individuals, who are approaching or in retirement, make smart financial decisions by providing fee-only financial and retirement planning services such as the management of long-term investment portfolios and corporate stock options. We think your investment choices should be simple and that your investment strategy shouldn’t try to beat the market, but that your investments should work with the market to offer you the greatest stability as you approach retirement.

Meet Andrew Fox, CFP

Andrew founded Fox Financial in 1993 and has been serving clients in or nearing retirement ever since. He provides financial and investment management services that serve the needs of CT and NY retirees and help clients make the best financial choices possible. Andrew loves to help clients understand how, with the right behavior, successful investing can be astonishingly simple.

Andrew specializes in designing and maintaining long-term investment portfolios, primarily for those approaching or enjoying retirement. He further specializes in designing strategies for the coordinated execution of corporate stock options. Prior to founding Fox Financial Services, Inc., Andrew worked as a branch manager for the Kraft Foods Federal Credit Union where he counseled and advised members on all aspects of personal financial planning ranging from investment portfolio design to credit management.

Andrew holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from Colgate University and has been a licensed Certified Financial Planner (CFP) since 1992. He is a member of the Greater Hudson Valley Financial Planning Association (FPA) and periodically conducts seminars in the metro New York and tri-state area on a wide range of investment and retirement planning topics.

Andrew is married and lives in Wilton, CT with his wife and two daughters.

Andrew’s Story

Why Fox Financial

We work to help you understand your money mindset so you have a clearer sense of what drives your decision-making when it comes to your finances.

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Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ

Click on the questions below to see my answer. If your question isn’t answered, feel free to Contact Me and I’ll be happy to answer it.

What are the keys to being a successful long-term investor?

It depends on a lot of things. However, for most success means creating a well-thought-out, suitable, cost-effective investment plan, and patiently sticking with it. The Fox Financial approach is one that emphasizes human behavior management just as much, if not more so, than it does money management. This is not to say that it is particularly easy to help clients keep in check the very powerful human emotions of fear and greed, but it’s a heck of a lot easier than trying to successfully time the market for the next forty years.

Perhaps the real key here is defining the term “successful.” Because our clients typically have anywhere from 35% to 75% of their portfolios invested in diversified stocks, it makes sense that an expected long-term rate of return will fall somewhere between what a portfolio kept in the bank would return and what a portfolio invested entirely in stocks would produce. So in this case “successful” means achieving a return within this range, skewed one way or another, depending on your particular asset allocation, which is determined by your individual circumstances.

What do you think of the stock market? Where's it headed?

You may find this surprising, but our answer to this question is not time sensitive. We think the long-term prospects will always be bright. Since 1926, the stock market’s average annual return has been a little under 10% while long-term bonds have returned around 6% and treasury bills and cash investments even less.* What do we mean by long-term? Twenty years or more, but remember this is your entire investing horizon, not simply the amount of time until you plan on retiring. If you’re fifty-five, you could easily be looking at a thirty-five or more year planning horizon. Likewise at sixty-five you’re still looking at twenty-five plus years. As far as our short-term view of the market, anything can and often does happen. Thankfully if you’re a long-term, diversified investor, with a sound financial plan, you shouldn’t particularly care about short-term random market movements. In summary, no matter where the market may be today, we like its long-term prospects, but we have no idea where it’s headed next month, next quarter, or next year for that matter.

*Source, Dimensional Fund Advisors, Matrix Book 2015

By working with a professional, shouldn't we expect to beat the market?

We wish it were that easy. Our clients would be happy, we’d be happy, and everything would be great in the world. Unfortunately there is a little thing called the risk/reward tradeoff that gets in the way. This tradeoff is the great equalizer. This is why no reasonable investor can expect to receive double-digit returns year after year with no risk. Likewise, this is why you should not expect your federally insured bank or credit union accounts to outperform the stock market over any considerable length of time. In order to even attempt to consistently “beat the market” year after year you must be willing to take on an amount of risk that is almost always inconsistent with what a person planning for or enjoying retirement should accept. What we try to do is help clients maximize return for the given amount of risk that they are willing, and is prudent, for them to accept. This amount of risk is defined very simply as that which will allow you to sleep comfortably at night no matter what is happening in the stock market day-to-day, week-to-week, quarter-to-quarter, or even year-to-year. Remember, long-term investing is just that. Pace yourself and set realistic goals.

How much do you charge and why?

Fox Financial is a fee-only advisor. This means that 100% of our revenues are paid directly by our clients through an annual management fee, paid quarterly. The annual management fee is 1% per year for the first $5,000,000 managed and .75% per year for the balance.

The fee structure is this way to eliminate conflicts of interest. By charging a fee based on assets under management, you can be certain that we have a vested interest in seeing your account grow as this is the only way that our fee income will increase. Responsible financial planning and investing is complicated enough without you having to wonder why your advisor might be recommending one product over another and whether or not this action is truly in your best interests. So we charge a fee that is easy to understand and calculate, and that puts both you as client, and us as advisor, on the same team always.

What's so great about diversification?

A diversified portfolio is one of the last “free lunches.” It works this way. When diversified, you definitely reduce risk without necessarily giving up reward. For example, many clients come to us with a 401(k) that is overloaded in their company’s stock. Hopefully the stock has been a great performer up until that point because then we offer our heartfelt congratulations. But in the next breath, we will suggest that they consider diversifying to reduce risk. You see, from that point forward, no one knows for certain what will happen to that company’s stock. Of course it could go through the roof, but then again it might just fall through the floorboards instead. Or it just might provide a good solid return for the next twenty or thirty years. Who knows? Certainly not us and quite honestly not you either.

With a diversified portfolio, a long-term time horizon, and a generous dose of patience, as an investor you will be rewarded. If your portfolio should fall on hard times because the economy is suffering, time will heal it and you will succeed. However, even with a long-term time horizon, and plenty of patience, there is no guarantee that any specific company’s stock will deliver the returns your investment plan needs.

In the exception to every rule category, there are some tricky tax rules (and opportunities) with respect to company stock in 401(k) plans, so before you do anything please make sure you have a qualified tax professional explain your options.

What do you think about timing the market?

We think it’s a dangerous and expensive investment strategy that many investors/gamblers find too seductive to resist. First of all, by definition, timing the market means attempting to load up on stocks or other securities when prices are rising and unload and/or sit on the sidelines as prices fall. Sounds great in theory but very, very difficult to consistently do. Similarly, many investors today try to time the buying and selling of individual securities. This is also very risky as for every confident buyer – think about it – there is an equally confident seller. Common sense with a touch of humility would suggest that you’re not going to be right all the time.

When you factor in the costs of constant buying and selling, this further reduces your odds of “beating the market.” The seductive part is very real in that almost everyone seems to know or have heard of someone who got rich in the market somehow. For every winner whom you’ve heard about, doesn’t it stand to reason there is a loser? A strategy that relies on timing the market, no matter where your information comes from, much more closely resembles gambling than investing. Be careful, or better yet, don’t do it at all!

Do I have to live near White Plains to work with you?

Thanks to the wonders of modern technology, we can serve clients in all 50 states.